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Including earlier purchases of holdings from the U.S. and Canadian governments, Fiat's spending on Chrysler stakes will total $3.7 billion. That compares with the $36 billion that the then Daimler-Benz AG paid for the U.S. company in 1998.

Those Italians know how to deal.

2nd Gear: Fiat Stockholders Jolly About News

Fiat stock, which is on the Milan Exchange, had a wild day after people found out the news above. The company's stock went up as much as 15.8%, The Detroit Free Press reports, before regulating at 12%.

So, yeah, people think Fiat got a good deal.

By keeping an extra bit of cash it's assumed that Fiat can spend more beefing up in Europe and investing in products.

IHS Automotive said Tuesday it forecasts total worldwide sales of self-driving cars will rise from nearly 230,000 in 2025 to 11.8 million in 2035. The firm predicts cars that have no driver controls — that are autonomous only — will be on the roads around 2030. The study also predicts that nearly all vehicles in use are likely to be self-driving cars or self-driving commercial vehicles sometime after 2050.

So, fully-automated cars are a ways off, but semi-autonomous vehicles will be all over the place. That makes sense.

Under the new rule, all car services—but not licensed taxis—must wait "at least 15 minutes" between taking a reservation and picking up a passenger, more than double what car services like Uber say is their normal wait time. The only exception: pickups at four- and five-star hotels and at industry expos.

Uber is probably going to be in line for some regulation if they don't standardize some of their practices, but in the meantime this is just nonsense.

Reverse: Uber Barn Find

On this day in 2009, media outlets report that a rare unrestored 1937 Bugatti Type 57S Atalante Coupe has been found in the garage of a British doctor. A month later, on February 7, the car sold at a Paris auction for some $4.4 million.